Although the First Cause is not bound by human categories it does not follow that they are entirely useless. It simply means that we should be aware of their limitations.
Agreed, but it does make it difficult to distinguish correct logic from incorrect logic. That weakens the force of any logical argument on the subject.
Time had a beginning and we know Creation must have occurred at that moment. It is illogical to believe the Creator and the created came into existence simultaneously because then you might as well believe the created appeared without a Creator! Does that strike you as credible?
My point is that without time you cannot tell which one came first, you have no way to measure. You cannot tell if A caused B or if B caused A because without time you are unable to say whether A or B came first. Indeed “first” has no meaning without a time against which to measure.
There is also the point that it is incorrect to describe an entity as “creator” if nothing has actually been created. Just as we cannot have a parent with no children so we cannot have a creator who has created nothing. A creator without a creation is a logical impossibility.
The created cannot appear without a creator but conversely the creator cannot be a creator without the created also existing. The two are mutually dependent; neither can exist without the other. A child cannot exist without parents and parents cannot be parents without there being a child.
“No time” cannot produce eternity! All it can produce is nothing! In science space, time, energy and matter are related to one another and there is still no consensus among scientists as to whether the universe is eternal…
Starting from time 0 and progressing forward you cannot show me a time when matter did not exist. I am not saying that time caused matter, I am saying that if matter has existed for all of time then it is legitimate to describe matter as eternal. There is no time when matter did not exist.
That is a physicalist assumption. Teleological explanation entails final causality: the means is determined by the end. Is the chronological sequence of physical events is not a full explanation of reality in Buddhism?
Buddhism emphasises change and interrelation. Parents imply children; children imply parents. Neither can exist separately. Similarly with cause and effect. A cause must have an effect, otherwise it is not a cause. An effect must have a cause, otherwise it is not an effect. Reality is analysed as a complex web of mutually conditioning processes. Final causes seem to be popular with the Abrahamic religions. They are seen as irrelevant and logically suspect in Buddhism. The Buddhist analysis of reality emphasises change above stasis. Final causes are usually seen as static and thus not of any use in Buddhist analysis.
If you are a Buddhist you must believe that concept of causation is inadequate because it omits the spiritual aspect of existence.
Your analysis of what I think is incorrect. Christianity makes a big separation between the material and the spiritual. Buddhism does not. All men may be reborn as gods. All gods may be reborn as men. Both men and gods are subject to the same moral law of karma. There is far less difference between men and gods in Buddhism than there is in Christianity. A man can become a fully enlightened Buddha which puts him far above any unenlightened god.
There are issues with causation, as pointed out by Nagarjuna. The problems are not with causation itself but with the human tendency to reify things which causes problems. A reified causation is not possible because it does not allow for any change.
It is impossible for something that either exists
or that does not exist to have a cause.
If it were non-existent, of what would they be the cause?
If it exists, why would it need a cause?
– Nagarjuna, Mulamadhyamakakarika 1:6
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